ABSTRACT
The One, by theoretical physicist Heinrich Pas, reviews the history of monism from the Greeks to the modern period. Pas proposes a monism he calls “the One.” His One follows from quantum mechanics. It is a universal wave function. He is then faced with how our everyday world arises. To answer he relies on a version of Evert’s many-worlds interpretation of quantum mechanics and a process of decoherence that results in a dualism of consciousness and the quasi-classical world of space, time, and matter. C. G. Jung proposed a dual-aspect monism influenced by synchronicity. A comparison between Pas’s monism and dualism and Jung’s finds some apparent differences, but in the end they are found to be remarkably similar.
Notes
1. Wikipedia, s.v., “Quantum decoherence,” accessed June 3, 2023, https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Quantum_decoherence.
Additional information
Notes on contributors
J. Linn Mackey
J. LINN MACKEY, PhD, is Professor Emeritus of Interdisciplinary Studies, Appalachian State University. He has a PhD in chemistry and a master’s degree in social ecology. He has published articles on chemistry, interdisciplinary studies, and Jungian studies. He is a member and former board member of The C. G. Jung Society of The Triangle, North Carolina. Correspondence: 130 Hunt Street, Apt. 303, Durham, NC 27701; Email: [email protected].